The IRMA Community
Newsletters
Research IRM
Click a keyword to search titles using our InfoSci-OnDemand powered search:
|
The Techoethical Ethos of Technic Self-Determination: Technological Determinism as the Ontic Fundament of Freewill
Abstract
This chapter addresses concerns that the development and proliferation of human enhancement technologies (HET) will be dehumanizing and a threat to our autonomy and sovereignty as individuals. The chapter argues contrarily that HET constitutes nothing less than one of the most effective foreseeable means of increasing the autonomy and sovereignty of individual members of society. Furthermore, it elaborates the position that the use of HET exemplifies—and indeed even intensifies—our most human capacity and faculty, namely the desire for increased self-determination, which is referred to as the will toward self-determination. Based upon this position, the chapter argues that the use of HET bears fundamental ontological continuity with the human condition in general and with the historically ubiquitous will toward self-determination in particular. HET will not be a dehumanizing force, but will rather serve to increase the very capacity that characterizes us as human more accurately than anything else.
Related Content
N. L. Swathi, Achukutla Kumar.
© 2024.
17 pages.
|
Gurwinder Singh, Anshika Thakur.
© 2024.
21 pages.
|
Ashok Singh Gaur, Hari Om Sharan, Rajeev Kumar.
© 2024.
16 pages.
|
Sabyasachi Pramanik.
© 2024.
17 pages.
|
Geetha Manoharan, Abdul Razak, C. V. Guru Rao, Sunitha Purushottam Ashtikar, M. Nivedha.
© 2024.
28 pages.
|
Roop Kamal, Manpreet Kaur, Jaspreet Kaur, Shivani Malhan.
© 2024.
10 pages.
|
Anu Sharma.
© 2024.
8 pages.
|
|
|